The Borneo Post

South Korea police apologise over botched serial killer case

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SEOUL: Police identified South Korea’s most notorious serial killer yesterday and said he murdered 15 women, as they apologised for a botched, decades-long investigat­ion that saw an innocent man jailed for 20 years.

Lee Chun-jae raped and murdered 10 women in rural parts of Hwaseong, south of Seoul, over a five-year period from 1986, officials said.

At the time a record number of police officers for a single case were mobilised to try to find the killer, investigat­ing some 21,000 individual­s and comparing the fingerprin­ts of around 20,000 more without success.

The inquiry inspired Oscarwinni­ng South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho’s 2003 box office hit ‘Memories of Murder’.

Lee, 57, was only named as a suspect last year — more than 30 years a er killing his first victim — using the latest forensic techniques to retrieve DNA from long-past crimes.

Under questionin­g, he had admi ed all 10 Hwaseong murders, as well as four others including an eight-year-old girl, police said, adding that he also raped nine other women.

“His psychopath­ic tendencies were evident, as he was unable to empathise with the victims’ pain and sufferings at all and continuous­ly showed off his crimes,” said provincial police chief Bae Yong-ju.

Bae bowed before the cameras as he apologised to the victims’ families and those who had been falsely accused as suspects, as well as a man who was wrongfully convicted of one of the killings and served 20 years in jail.

Lee is currently serving a life sentence for raping and murdering his sister-in-law in 1994, but will not be prosecuted for his other crimes as the statute of limitation­s has expired, police said.

Yesterday’s announceme­nt confirms that a man surnamed Yoon — who was convicted in 1989 of raping and killing a teenage girl among the Hwaseong victims -- was wrongfully jailed.

Yoon was released on parole in 2009 a er serving 20 years in prison, and filed for a retrial last year a er police launched their investigat­ion into Lee.

Reports say at least four individual­s took their own lives in the 1990s a er being investigat­ed — and allegedly abused — by police as possible suspects in the Hwaseong murders, whose victims were aged 14 to 71.

Yoon had been physically abused and “forced to make a false confession”, Bae told reporters, adding that eight police officers and prosecutor­s involved with his 1980s investigat­ion had been charged with abuse of power and illegal detention.

“I bow my head down and offer apologies to the victims of Lee Chun-jae’s crimes, the surviving families and everyone who suffered damage due to the police investigat­ion, including Mr Yoon,” said Bae.

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